Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.15.1 (ACE)
18,300 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of angioedema induced by antihypertensive therapy with lisinopril is presented. The patient was a 70 year old black woman, with a history of hypertension for 15 years. The patient presented with acute onset of swelling involving the oro-facial region and respiratory distress after ingestion of three doses of lisinopril over a three day period. A clinical diagnosis of drug induced angioedema was made based on clinical presentation. The patient was treated with diphenhydramine, 50 mg intravenously, and hydrocortisone 100 mg every eight hours with resolution of her symptoms over a 24 hour period. Angioedema should be recognized as a possible life threatening complication of therapy with lisinopril, and other angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors. This usually responds to therapy with antihistamines and steroids if recognized early.
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PMID:Angioedema complicating lisinopril therapy. 133 26

Angiotensin converting-enzyme inhibitors cross the placenta and modify the maternal, foetal and utero-placental renin-angiotensin system. Eight cases of pregnancy in women taking captopril have been published, 7 other cases being reported in this review paper. There were one spontaneous and 2 therapeutic abortions, one of which disclosed a malformation of uncertain diagnosis and imputation. One intrauterine death at 28 weeks was probably due to the severity of the maternal disease. Two children born to mothers also treated with frusemide died of neonatal anuria. Delivery or caesarean section occurred before term in 8 cases, and there were 3 cases of neonatal respiratory distress with a favourable outcome. Finally, one mother gave birth at term to twins of normal weight. The cases with respiratory distress can be attributed to the mother's hypertension, to prematurity and/or to concomitant treatment with beta-blockers, while the cases with anuria seem to be due to inhibition of the effects of angiotensin on renal haemodynamics, with salt depression as a possible aggravating factor. Treatment with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors does not seem to warrant therapeutic abortion. However, these drugs are contra-indicated in pregnancy and should only be given to women wishing to become pregnant if they present with resistant and dangerous arterial hypertension. A programme of pharmacovigilance is being set up to follow up such pregnancies.
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PMID:[Inhibition of angiotensin converting enzyme in human pregnancy. 15 cases]. 300 90

During the past years, angioedema occurring in association with angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors is seen more and more often. This is due to the increasing use of these drugs for hypertension and congestive heart failure. If the diagnosis is missed and prescription of the ACE inhibitor is prolonged, recurrent and more severe episodes of angioedema may occur. In case of involvement of the upper airway and respiratory distress, the condition may be life-threatening. We demonstrate three such patients, men of 84, 73 and 63 years old. First of all, the airway should be secured. Administration of epinephrine may be indicated. Further use of ACE inhibitors is contraindicated.
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PMID:[Life-threatening angioedema as a side effect of angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors]. 772 69

A female neonate, born by cesarean section at 37 weeks of gestation, presented with respiratory distress syndrome, right pneumothorax and anuria. A sonogram showed increased echogenicity, with neither hydronephrosis nor macroscopic cysts. Peritoneal dialysis was started on the 14th day because of renal insufficiency, but the newborn died on the 33rd day. Family history was unremarkable, except that the mother received piroxicam at about the 26th week of gestation. A sonogram at the 28th week showed oligohydramnios. Histopathological study of the kidneys revealed crowded glomeruli and only few differentiated proximal convoluted tubules in the inner cortex, abnormally differentiated microcystic tubules and microcystic glomeruli in the outer cortex. Periodic acid-Schiff staining showed only traces of brush border in the dilated tubules of the outer cortex. Immunoperoxidase staining for epithelial membrane antigen was positive in the luminal border of all tubules. Electron microscopy confirmed the presence of brush border remnants and other proximal tubular characteristics in some segments. The renal abnormality bears some similarities to that found in familiar renal tubular dysgenesis, but it fits better with those described after maternal use of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The lesion in this case appears to have resulted from fetal exposure to piroxicam. Recently, a second pregnancy ended in a completely normal female newborn.
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PMID:Fetal renal maldevelopment with oligohydramnios following maternal use of piroxicam. 781 9

BACKGROUND. Exposure of pregnant women to angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor may have side effects on the fetus or newborn, mainly oligoamnios and impaired renal function. CASE REPORT N zero 1. A 34 year-old woman was given enalapril from the onset of her pregnancy because of hypertension from the age of 18 years. Oligoamnios was diagnosed in the fetus on gestational week 28; enalapril was then replaced by nifedipine but this drug was badly tolerated so that the woman was again given enalapril 8 days later. The baby (1700 g) was born by cesarean section at gestational week 34 because of acute distress syndrome; he developed hypotension, anuria, generalized oedema and was placed in intensive care. Treatment included ventilation, sympathomimetic agents, and diuretics. An exchange-transfusion followed by peritoneal dialysis was performed a few hours later. Renal function returned to normal between the 3rd and 5th day. Unilateral kidney hypoplasia was diagnosed at the age of 2 years. CASE N zero 2. A 24 year-old woman was given enalapril at the third trimester of a twin pregnancy. Delivery was full term at 37 weeks. The first baby, a boy weighing 2610 g, suffered from hypoglycemia and vomiting followed by hypotension and oliguria that required exchange-transfusion and repeated peritoneal dialysis. This boy has developed moderate chronic renal failure and hypertension. The second baby, a girl weighing 2,165 g, suffered from respiratory distress syndrome followed by hypotension and oliguria, but her renal function returned to normal within a few days. CONCLUSIONS. The use of angiotension converting enzyme inhibitor by pregnant women places the fetus at severe risk: treatment with this type of drug should be stopped as soon as pregnancy is confirmed.
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PMID:[Fetal and neonatal effects of maternal treatment with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor]. 795 36

A previously fit 22 year old man was struck in the chest by a concrete block dropped through the windscreen of his car while he was driving on the motorway. He suffered extensive chest wall trauma and lung contusion, which subsequently precipitated acute respiratory distress. On admission ECG showed right bundle branch block and left axis deviation. Three days later QRS duration was normal but there was anterior ST segment elevation and subsequent T wave change. There was a large rise in creatine kinase, and echocardiography revealed septal and apical hyokinesis as well as a mobile mass attached to the left side of the interventricular septum, which had the echogenic texture of myocardium. The patient had fixed perfusion defects in the areas of hypokinesis on thallium scanning but the coronary arteries were unobstructed at angiography. He was treated with warfarin in the short term and an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor in the longer term and has made an asymptomatic recovery. Outpatient echocardiography two months after the injury demonstrated some recovery in overall left ventricular systolic function and no evidence of the intracardiac mass. This case illustrates some of the typical features of non-fatal cardiac contusion associated with non-penetrating cardiac trauma, and was complicated by partial thickness avulsion of a strip of the myocardium in the interventricular septum.
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PMID:Concrete induced cardiac contusion. 939 Dec 97

The efficacy and safety of the angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor enalapril in dogs with naturally acquired class III or class IV heart failure was evaluated in this study. Eighteen small-breed dogs with insufficiency of their mitral valves, but without other diseases were included in this study over a period of six months. When necessary due to massive pulmonary edema or high serum potassium concentrations, furosemide was added to the therapy with enalapril. No other drugs, including digitalis, were used in this study. The treatment was followed by anamnesis, clinical examinations, electrocardiography, radiography, echocardiography and laboratory diagnosis. Examinations were performed before treatment and after one week, after six weeks and after six months of treatment. 72% of the dogs improved in NYHA classification until the end of the study (p < 0.05). The incidence of seizures due to syncopes or severe respiratory distress decreased during this study (p < 0.01). For 28% of the dogs this treatment was not successful. In the electrocardiographic, radiographic and laboratory examinations statistically significant changes could not be recorded. The decrease in heart rate did not reach statistical significance. The echocardiographic investigation evaluated a significant decrease in fractional shortening and in the diastolic diameter of the left ventricular wall (p < 0.05 respectively p < 0.01), but no significant change in the diastolic or systolic diameter of the interventricular septum. The average oral dose of enalapril was 0.38 mg/kg body weight b.i.d., the average dose of furosemide was 0.37 mg/kg body weight b.i.d. in the first week of the study and was raised to 0.74 mg/kg body weight b.i.d. until the end of the study. Side effects like diarrhea, vomiting or reduced appetite did not increase during the course of the study. However one dog was excluded from the study because of repeated vomiting after six weeks of treatment. This study shows the beneficial clinical and hemodynamic effects and the security of the therapy with enalapril for dogs with heart failure due to mitral insufficiency.
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PMID:[Treatment of mitral valve insufficiency in dogs with the ACE inhibitor enalapril. A clinical progress study]. 953 70

Microvascular endothelial cells (MVEC), which differ from large vessel endothelial cells, have been isolated successfully from lungs of various species, including man. However, contamination by nonendothelial cells remains a major problem in spite of several technical improvements. In view of the organ specificity of MVEC, endothelial cells should be derived from the tissue involved in the diseases one wishes to study. Therefore, to investigate some of the immunopathological mechanisms leading to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), we have attempted to isolate lung MVEC from patients undergoing thoracic surgery for lung carcinoma and patients dying of ARDS. The method described here includes four main steps: (1) full digestion of pulmonary tissue with trypsin and collagenase, (2) aggregation of MVEC induced by human plasma, (3) Percoll density centrifugation, and (4) selection and transfer of MVEC after local digestion with trypsin/EDTA under light microscopy. Normal and ARDS-derived lung MVEC purified by this technique presented contact inhibition (i.e., grew in monolayer), and expressed classical endothelial markers, including von Willebrand factor (vWF), platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1(PECAM-1, CD31), and transcripts for the angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE). The cells also formed capillarylike structures, took up high levels of acetylated low-density lipoprotein (Ac-LDL), and exhibited ELAM-1 inducibility in response to TNF. Contaminant cells, such as fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells, or pericytes, were easily recognized on the basis of morphology and were eliminated by selection of plasma-aggregated cells under light microscopy. The technique presented here allows one to study the specific involvement and contribution of pulmonary endothelium in various lung diseases.
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PMID:An improved method for isolation of microvascular endothelial cells from normal and inflamed human lung. 971 12

Hypertension is found among 1 to 6% of young women. Treatment aims to decrease cardiovascular risk, the magnitude of which is less dependent on the absolute level of blood pressure (BP) than on associated cardiovascular risk factors, hypertension-related target organ damage and/or concomitant disease. Lifestyle modifications are recommended for all hypertensive individuals. The threshold of BP at which antihypertensive therapy should be initiated is based on absolute cardiovascular risk. Most young women are at low risk and not in need of antihypertensive therapy. All antihypertensive agents appear to be equally efficacious; choice depends on personal preference, social circumstances and an agent's effect on cardiovascular risk factors, target organ damage and/or concomitant disease. Although most agents are appropriate for, and tolerated well by, young women, another consideration remains that of pregnancy, 50% of which are unplanned. A clinician must be aware of a woman's method of contraception and the potential of an antihypertensive agent to cause birth defects following inadvertent exposure in early pregnancy. Conversely, if an oral contraceptive is effective and well tolerated, but the woman's BP becomes mildly elevated, continuing the contraceptive and initiating antihypertensive treatment may not be contraindicated, especially if the ability to plan pregnancy is important (e.g. in type 1 diabetes mellitus). No commonly used antihypertensive is known to be teratogenic, although ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor antagonists should be discontinued, and any antihypertensive drugs should be continued in pregnancy only if anticipated benefits outweigh potential reproductive risk(s). The hypertensive disorders of pregnancy complicate 5 to 10% of pregnancies and are a leading cause of maternal and perinatal mortality and morbidity. Treatment aims to improve pregnancy outcome. There is consensus that severe maternal hypertension (systolic BP > or = 170mm Hg and/or diastolic BP > or = 110mm Hg) should be treated immediately to avoid maternal stroke, death and, possibly, eclampsia. Parenteral hydralazine may be associated with a higher risk of maternal hypotension, and intravenous labetalol with neonatal bradycardia. There is no consensus as to whether mild-to-moderate hypertension in pregnancy should be treated: the risks of transient severe hypertension, antenatal hospitalisation, proteinuria at delivery and neonatal respiratory distress syndrome may be decreased by therapy, but intrauterine fetal growth may also be impaired, particularly by atenolol. Methyldopa and other beta-blockers have been used most extensively. Reporting bias and the uncertainty of outcomes as defined warrant cautious interpretation of these findings and preclude treatment recommendations.
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PMID:Treating hypertension in women of child-bearing age and during pregnancy. 1136 52

Fifty per cent of pregnancies are unplanned, and 1-6% of young women have pre-existing hypertension. However, no commonly used antihypertensive agent is known to be teratogenic. ACE inhibitors (and angiotensin-receptor antagonists) should be discontinued due to fetotoxicity. Five to 10% of pregnant women have hypertension, of which pre-existing hypertension is but one type. There is consensus that severe maternal hypertension (blood pressure >or=170/110 mmHg) should be treated to minimize the risk of acute cerebrovascular complications. Parenteral hydralazine may be associated with a higher risk of maternal hypotension, and intravenous labetalol with neonatal bradycardia. There is no consensus that mild-to-moderate hypertension in pregnancy should be treated. Clinical trials indicate that transient severe hypertension, antenatal hospitalization, proteinuria at delivery and neonatal respiratory distress syndrome may be decreased by normalizing blood pressure, but intrauterine fetal growth restriction may be increased. Methodological problems with published trials warrant cautious interpretation of these findings. Methyldopa and beta-blockers have been used most extensively, although atenolol may impair fetal growth in particular and should be avoided.
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PMID:Drugs in pregnancy. Antihypertensives. 1180 May 27


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